Not all exotic pollinator introductions are bad: an introduced buzz-pollinating bee Amegilla pulchra (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in Fiji indicates little potential for enhancing the spread of weeds

Date

2019

Authors

Groutsch, J.K.
Miller, N.C.
Tuiwawa, M.
Hayes, S.
Stevens, M.I.
Schwarz, M.P.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Austral Entomology, 2019; 58(3):533-539

Statement of Responsibility

Conference Name

Abstract

The Australian buzz pollinating bee Amegilla pulchra (Anthophorini) is now widespread in Fiji and represents apotentially major change to plant-pollinator networks. The introduction of a buzz pollinator into the Fijian ecosystem, which has no native buzz pollinators, may have especially important consequences because many pan-tropical weed species are from the Solanaceae and usually require buzz pollination for effective seed set.We examined floral visitations of three introduced bees, A. pulchra, Apis mellifera, Braunsapis puangensis and one native bee Homalictus fijiensis at 16 sites across Viti Levu, covering a total of 27 plant species and 165 bee–plant interactions.We did not observe any visits by A. pulchra to any solanaceous plants, but it was a frequent visitor to several introduced plants that do not require buzz pollination. Our results contradict recent studies that suggested that A. pulchra may enhance the spread of solanaceous weeds in Fiji. The majority of plants, however,received more visits from exotic bees combined than from the native H. fijiensis and indicate that exotic bees in Fiji may increase weediness of multiple exotic plants. Our results indicate the need to explore pollination networks to understand exotic pollinator influences on the spread of potential weeds.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

Copyright 2018 Australian Entomological Society

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record